|
|
514 Articles match "KM","Sharing"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
|
Monday, March 15, 2010
I wrote this up in Complex Acts of Knowing and in a more popular form under the title Just in Time KM. They provide an example and hopefully a stimulation to others in the organization that a COP is a useful why to share and exploit knowledge. This is not so much to provide for a "centrally-planned" state in a KM initiative as it is to demonstrate the strength of a knowledge democracy. HOME JOIN NEWSLETTER LIST ABOUT WHAT WE DO WHO WE ARE OPERATING PRINCIPLES CONTACT US ANNUAL REPORTS PRACTITIONERS NETWORK DIRECTORY OF PRACTITIONERS SEEKING ACCREDITATION PRACTITIONER LOGIN EDUCATION ACCREDITATION NARRATIVE RESEARCH SENSEMAKER COMPLEXITY SOCIAL COMPUTING COURSE COMPARISON METHODS METHODS WIKI RESOURCES ARTICLES BY DAVE SNOWDEN ARTICLES BY OTHERS CASE STUDIES PODCASTS PRESENTATIONS INFLUENTIAL BOOKS
|
|
Monday, March 15, 2010
Tags: Mobile , Mobility , 2010 , Smartphones , LCTY2010 , Lotusphere , Travelling , Business Travelling , Business Travel , Mobile Web Computing , Hotels , Confortel Suites Madrid , WiFi , Internet Connection , Connectivity , Lack of Service , No Service , iPhone , Tethering , Hotel Rey Juan Carlos I , Black Lists , SpeedTest , Services , Pay Per Use , VPN , UMTS , Web Worker , Web Knowledge Worker , Access , Internet Access , Wireless , SOMESSO , Headshift , #sbs2010 , sbs2010 , Social Business Submmit , Enterprise 2.0 , Social Software , Social Networking
|
|
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Well, a few weeks back Lee Bryant , CEO and co-founder of Headshift , part of Dachis Group , invited me to participate on the upcoming SOMESSO / Headshift Social Business Summit that will be taking place next week, on March 18th , where I will be moderating one of the panels: the one on Internal Use of Social Software, where I will try to share some further insights on what IBM has been doing for nearly three years now with one of its most successful social software adoption programs: BlueIQ .
It surely promises to be a rather interesting one, since I’ll be moderating
|
|
The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
|
•
Monday, September 28, 2009
Funny enough, that has been like that for quite a while, having gotten started around 2001, when I was first getting exposed to Knowledge Management (KM or Knowledge Sharing, whatever you would prefer) as time and time again I kept bumping into multiple knowledge managers wanting to define it. Fast forward to 2009 … and we still haven’t come to terms with the fact that we may not be able to define it, after all; at least, that’s what may be coming out after all of what has been written on the topic over the last few months, where KM definitions seem to have peaked
|
|
•
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Use multiple paths to create and share knowledge and information.
Knowledge management should never be labeled as KM, but should follow in form and function the natural lines of behaviors and cultures already established in the organization and in the market.
People often say I’m a KM practitioner. I had not read Steve Barth’s blog in a while and today, while trying to catch up a bit, I saw this post on knowledge management: Letter to a young client
Knowledge management builds collective capacity by increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of every
|
|
|
|
•
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
A little while ago I posted on how Communities of Practice (CoPs) can act as a sense-making model for KM . Which means the contents of this post is more focused on the online element of KM. But it is to be said that offline knowledge sharing techniques are not to be neglected eg. Here’s a direct link to the model .
NOTE: I used CoPs as a model as that’s what we are doing at work, but obviously this is a similar concept when dealing with social networks.
|
|
•
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
I think it’s getting us closer to the KM productivity (sense-making) aim that knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer has always aspired to, which is:
which also helps out in the re-contextualising process as you share a common wavelength or level understanding with people in your network)
Micro-sharing sites like Twitter ( Twitter Search )
- Social search is resurfacing as a hot topic of late , due to how effective Twitter has become in helping you find information, and how it is close to how we source information in the offline world (via our network).
|
|
•
Saturday, April 11, 2009
I think the deployment of our CoPs is a mix of a KM demand and supply strategy . At a macro level it’s about sharing knowledge in general, getting around hierarchies by allowing people to form cross-functional groups. Anyway, the KM Demand strategy is more at the micro-level. Our Communities of Practice at work are currently in the development stage. As we learn the software and develop guides we are also piloting lots of various communities to learn about structure, and human dynamics.
|
|
|
|
•
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Thought I’d share a few slides from a presentation I’m giving at work on Communities of Practice (CoP) from a knowledge management perspective.
My aim was to contrast traditional KM of conscripting best practices, with a new approach based on sensemaking pkm and networks …more appropriate tools, design for emergence and ambient awareness , and amplifying how we get things done offline…basically a more cognitive science approach over management science.
A great deal of my visual concept is based on the work of Dave Snowden , who looks at KM from a more anthropological, human behaviour perspective…a lot of his work deals with the notion of “context”, and I guess this is coupled with “intrinsic” motivation or engagement .
|
|
•
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Knowledge Management doesn’t want to do anything with Social Computing, because of the chaotic, messy and unstructured sharing of knowledge and information, and how little control organisations may have over it all, specially within communities (Which are currently the major drivers of social software adoption within the business world). And Social Computing doesn’t want to do anything with Knowledge Management because all of the "management" piece of knowledge and that willingness from KM to control both the flow of information and knowledge within an organisation.
|
|
•
Thursday, January 28, 2010
wanted to share some of them, and find out what you use and how. KM Method Cards
Patrick Patrick Lambe and the folks at Straitsknowledge created a deck of cards to introduce people to knowledge management and knowledge sharing methods. Tags: creativity facilitation knowledge sharing visual thinkin I love things you can touch and play with when facilitating face to face. This is probably why I was so attracted to the “drawing on walls” involved in graphic facilitation , kinesthetic modeling and just plain PLAY as a way to work together.
|
|
|
|
•
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Mark’s post also covers some blog discussion on the difference between sharing and communication, which I may add to in another post.
Nick Milton says in a blog post:
"…there is no point in creating a culture of sharing, if you have no culture of re-use. Pull is a far more powerful driver for Knowledge Management than Push, and I would always look to create a culture of knowledge seeking before creating a culture Mark Gould has a great post which has picked up on a thread in one of the LinkedIn forums on the "Pulling" and "Pushing" of information.
|
|
•
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Need I say more…our implementation is under KM, which I feel is OK, as the KM team has always been about sense-making.
"Our belief was that our primary organizational challenge was changing behaviors and perceptions, rather than implementing a specific technology platform." I want to do an ROI roundup post one day, but the premise is if people are connected and converse we will become more effective and efficient, we will get real knowledge sharing (people to people).
A while back I posted on Chuck Hollis’s journey in introducing Communities of Practice to EMC.
|
|